What did Edwin Waterhouse blue plaque do at 6 Frederick's Place?

6 Frederick's PlaceBlue Plaque

The Story

# Frederick's Place and the Foundations of Modern Accountancy Standing before this elegant Georgian building in the heart of the City, you're looking at the birthplace of one of accountancy's most transformative eras. Between 1899 and 1905, Edwin Waterhouse operated from these offices at the very moment when accounting was evolving from a purely administrative function into a rigorous, standardised profession—and it was here, in this specific location, that he helped establish the frameworks and practices that would define the field for generations. The work conducted within these walls during those six crucial years represented far more than routine bookkeeping; Waterhouse was pioneering audit methodologies and professional standards that would eventually shape how businesses proved their financial integrity to investors and regulators. This address matters not because it was where Waterhouse simply worked, but because it was the crucible where modern auditing itself was forged, making Frederick's Place a quiet but essential landmark in the history of British commerce and professional practice.

Location

6 Frederick's Place

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